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"THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, JAN. 1, 1932, ~ Bv GEORGE McMANUS BRINGING UP FATHER WELL,NOW THAT WE HAVE HIRED THE CHEF THAT WAS FORMALLY EMPLOYED BY THE SOCIAL LEADERS OF OURCITY-| TOLD HIM TO COOK THE MEALS JUST AS HE DID FOR THEM. | TOLD THAT CHEF TO COOK JUST WHAT HE DID FOR MR. AND MRS. OTTO NOBETTER. DO YOU MEAN TO TELL ME THEY EAT CORNED BEEF AND CABBAGE ? GREAT HEAVENS' WHAT 1S THAT HE 19 COOKING? 'Ll GO SEE. -$0 tomorrow IF YOU WOULD REAP THE “HARVEST OF TOMORROW” YOU MUST UTILIZE THE “SURPLUS OF TODAY” IN THE CREATING OF AN “EMERGENCY FUND” BY OPENING AND BUILDING A SUBSTANTIAL BANK ACCOUNT AT THIS BANK THATS WHAT HES DOING. HES COOKIN CORNED BEE! AN' CABBAGE.. YES, MUML ALWAYS ON B WEDNES DAY. Northwestern Grid Team Is to Lose Great Linemen for Campaign Coming Y ear | First National Bank YOUR ALASKA LAUNDRY CLEANING PRESSING EVANSTON, Ill, Jan. 1. — Un-|with Engebretsen, will be back to less strength at tackle and guard|hold down one of the guard jobs. plays a bigger part in football suc-!But for those tackle jobs and the | |cess than even the most obs rving |other guard post, it's apparently | grid fan realizes, Northwesiern up to the current freshman class| ! should be up near the top of theto furnish the replacements. GET READY FUR |Big Ten again in 1932, If the class of '30 can do that| DAILY SPORTS CARTOON ) s 30STON 4929 i | Coach Dick Hanley will lose by task as brilliantly as the present ’graduatmn eight varsity players off sophomores supplied backfield {what is recognized as one of NOT[h-:puwer for last year's team, Purple | western’s greatest teams, but half of that octet consists of two giant Itackles and two high - ranking REGULARBAMES == },! Three of the others are backs who supporters will be inclined to ad-| (mit there is a Santa Claus! Four freshmen, who likely will figure in the rush to grab these responsible positions are Tangora Telephone 15 Juneau and Douglas Hig Schools Start Series Next Friday i“’“ s have not been absolutely essential |to the Wildcats' success last sea-! and the eighth is an end, of there are plenty. of Washington, D. C., Zuver of dams, Neb., and Fundus of De- troit, all husky tackles, and Al| |Kawal of Cicero, Tll, & guard and | Can’t Be Done | brother of Eddie Kawal, who star- But replacing Jack Riley, all- red as a center at Illinois a few conference tackle, and Dal Marvil, years ago. All-America in the same role, and Jimmy Evans and Paul Engebret- sen, three-season guards, just can't be done, Purple adherents fear. Al Moore and Will Lewis have been valuable as fill-in backs dur- ing their senior season, and Reb Russell was mighty useful in the With the Christmas holidays a!: their close, Juneau and Douglas! high school basketball players will i immediate attention to the t of their series of interscholas- | tic games. The initial contest of the new year and the regular sea- son between them will be played next Friday evening in the gym- nasium of the Juneau high school. ' 1A§ planned now, the programwill jocine games, but with Pug Rent- jconsits of these two events only, ner ang the great sophomore quar- ad of three as has been the 4e; of Olson, Potter, Meenan and DEP A RT M E NTS m heretofore. and this ar-ig,niyan ayailable, Wildcat fans cx-) M |ranzement is expected to meet with | o te . K o ¢ \pect the backfield to take care of . . | public approval as the playing of jieore Receipts Larger and Mail 2 , Ralph Eylar will leave| 1 1 often failed Yo sustain the intersst!ine enq situation in the capable| Heavier n 1931 of spectatdrn {hands of Dick Fencl, junior, and | boy and girl aihlelcs Of gpan and Kostbade. At center,| If the business of the postoffice chools have kept up lighl pu: wMacDonald, last year's first- in a community reflects its eco- e —— POST OFFICE HAS —— INSURANCE Allen Shattuck, Inc. Established 1893 |three games in one evening has| gonio. | Juneau, Alaska : than Ever Before Have Kept Up Practica { four promising sophs, Manske, Jens | The both HIS MAJOR LEAGUE CAREER N 1016 ——r GOULD ~ Hard though the times may be, ®or perhaps because of them, we may hear more about Mr. Reggie Meen, of Leicestershire. He is the new heavyweight cham- pion of Great Britain by virtue of scoring a victory on points in 12 * rounds over Charlies Smith. The Londen press reports the affair in much detail and Fred Dartnell, who o has peered from the ringside in many countries, including the United States, writes: “The new champion is a splend- idly built fellow and as he car- vies a really dangerous punch he should be good enough to meel anybody with a fair chance of suc- o cess. He can box. t0o, if he likes, but he was beaten and well beaten, too, at this part of the game by Smith."” % el Tender-Hearted Bloke As to some detans of the cham- pionship match, these may serve: “The fight soon blossomed into fierce exchanges of punches. Meen was not disposed to lead but he found the Londoner’s stomach with * some short armed blows and crouching in aggressive style, cer- tainly looked menacing. “Meen was twice cautioned for ®lying on his opponent and stungj by the reprimand he landed a fine | *right. 1 “Meen knocked Smith down| with a magnificent punch in the‘ sixth round and had him badly dxs:‘ turbed both physically and men- tally. The situation yelled for thel ¢ workmaniike finish of a beat‘:n) man but Meen simply stood off) and allowed Smith to recover.” { “Some people,” adds Dartnell,| ® «say that it is only Meen’s tender heart that makes him stand off *when he has got his man in bad, straits. Well, that ‘may redound to his credit as a man and as a sportsman, but it is sheer fol}y in a fighter. “The man who goes into the ring should have the same point of view as that once expressed to me ! by Jack Dempsey. ‘My feeling al-| ways is’ said ‘the old champion,| ‘that if I dont do it {o the other ! " , fellow he will do it to me’ and| 1quarterback. was scaling signals in o= SRESEREESS lack of altruism it is eminently practical. The practical fighter will always beat the sentimentalist of the ring.” The soft sensibilities of Mr. Meen in the ring would, of course, experience a severe shock in the event he is recruited for the Amer- ican heavyweight bandwagon. Semers Calls His Shot Before the season is closed for anecdotes about Munn, Manders & | Company of Minnesota, the AP’s Mr. Roy Hendrickson of Minneap- olis contributes this anecdote of the ‘Gophers: “Mr. Peter- omers, Minnesota the Gopher-Ohio State game and Minnesota which had been driving along prettywell on thethird down in its own teiritory, found that it needed five yards. “Somers called Clarence Munn, the All-America guard back, which looked like a fake punt. After the huddle, and Minnesota lined up, Somers called out: ‘Professor Munn will now take the ball through right tackle for 15 yards.' “Which is exactly what Munn did, with Ohio State prepared for a play around the other side. The peculiar part of it is it was 15 yards to the inch. “Mr. Somers, notable for his veracity, is prepared to take an oath in support of this, but further deponent sayeth not.” ——————— The first football game between | Auburn and Georgia was played in Atlanta, February 22, 1892. American Beauty Parlor Mrs. Jack Wilson Telephone 397 while this may seem a complete BURLE (G4 CRINES ~THE NATIONAL Leagues " TRAVELIN' maN All Riglts Reserved by The Johnny Shaw, guard, is the only regular returning for the Duke basketball team. Coach Howard Jones of the Southern California Trojans, for- merly coached football at Duke university. Little Joe Funderburk, freshman quarterback at Tennessee, is hailed as a second Bobby Dodd. The University of Kentucky plans a football game with the Army this year. Minnesota and Ohio, oldest and | youngest respectively in the Big Ten, have met but three times on |’ the gridiron. Two persons were seriously in-! |jured when a soccer game in Si. Louis broke up in a free-for-all in which players and spectators Jjoined. Herb Keith, Freeport, IIl, pro football player, punted 91 yards in a charity game with Clinton, Ia. The ball traveled 72 yards in the air. A new football coach will succeed Orville Neal at Virginia Polytech- nic institute next season. A 'number of new shuffleboard courts have been made ready for the winter at St. Petersburg, Fla. Mayes McLain, former Haskell grid star, scored all his team’s points when the St. Louis Gunners defeated the Des Moines Hawkeyes 10-0. DAILY EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY JOB Printing ick Service if you want is—seliable seevicx always. We always place our guarantes of satisfaction back ot every peinting job we do. We are good peinters—know it— judgment with ous guarantee stringer, will return. Up To Freshman Dilley, who alternated LS PRogp HAPPyy, .. CRITYy HEALy, IS OUR WISH TO YOU FOR 1932 Happy New Year SABIN’S “The Store for Men” |nomic condition, as statistical ex- | perts affirm, then Juneau has just experienced an unusually prosper- |ous year, for the postoffice has just | closed the best twelve-month period in its history, declared Postmistress Josephine Spickett. | Receipts Exceed $24,000 | Receipts, which comprise returns from the sale of stamps, the rental 'of boxes and other sources of in- !come totaled more than $24,000, | which is a few thousand dollars in |excess of the amount in 1930. | More than 15,000 money orders | were issued, a gain of more than 1,000. All boxes, numbering 1573, are rented, and this aggregate is in excess of the record of any pre- vious year. Heavier Mails Both Ways Figures have not been compiled on incoming and outgoing mails, but both made large increases. This Christmas, for™ instance, the number of packages exceeded by several hundred, the packages re- ceived last Christmas, and outgoing packages this Yuletide totaled more than 500 the outgoing number last [Yuletld& “Postoffice business in 1931 show- ed gains in all departments over the figures of 1930,” said Mrs. Spickett, “and there is every indi- cation that 1932 will excel the splendid record of 1931. —————— An army of students swept sev- eral inches of snow off the gridiron Ihere just before the Gonzaga- Washington State football battle November 21. HE INDIAN PRICES D price, that will give trim for the approaching struggles. | eveply matched. At the recent girls over the Douglas girls. | the floor. We have good prospects ning, forwards; George Karabel-| las boys showed to advantage in who, with few exceptions, were | played. Adventist Chapel is fully illustrated with pictures coals that serve, satisf’ Pastor Vernon Gyes, in the new practice since the beginning of the yuletide vacation. But in the| next week. they will devote them—‘ Geotge selves more seriously to getting in “The games next Friday should be of unusual interest,” declared E. G. Wentland, coach of the Juneau B high school boys’ team. “Both the & boy and girl aggregations are Y N ‘ tournament at Chilkoot Barracks, | " the Juneau boys were beaten by | ” Douglas by only three points. and . ¢ the same margin constituted the| i extent of the victory of the Juneau | One Out Of Game | “In the Chilkoot Barracks games we lost one of our best players.| Thomas Redlingshafer's knee in-| jury will not permit his return to| of getting a winning combination | out of the rest of the first string | squad. It consists now of Bill Nikish, center; Elmer Lindstrom,! Hilding Haglund and Robert Hen- | nickoff, Alvin Bloomquist, Paul| Hanson and Francis Riendeau, guards.” Profit From Team Work At Chilkoot Barracks, the Doug- r team work. Most of them| been playing together four and they are profiting from experience. Juneau, on the other hand, is composed of players, strangers to one another last fall, insofar as concerns basketball. | Their holiday practice is believed | to have developed better team work than they have heretofore dis- .- Rev. Vernon Gyes Wil Soon Begin Series in The Bible Chautauqua lectures by Pastor H. L. Woods will close; Sunday evening in the A. B. Hall, the subject being “The Parable! of the Ten Virgins.” This lecture and is one of Pastor ‘Wood's best lectures. All are invited. | Pastor 'Wood reminds the public to watch for next week’s announce- ment of a series of lectures by Seventh - day Adventist Mission S Chapel. - Eight Washington State College gridders played their last college football .game when the Cougars jlost to the University of Washing- L ton recently, £ is A COAL with a Price that appeals to every Coal consumer in Juneau We have higher priced coals but none at any economy than “INDIAN.” Pacfic Coast Coal Co. CALL DIRECT—412 LUMP NUT $13.50 $15.50 ELIVERED more satisfaction and Stick to known y and save, Frye-Bruhn Company PACKERS—FRESH MEATS, FISH AND POULTRY Frye’s Delicious Hams and Bacon Three Deliveries Daily Phone 38 LU LU T T T T T LT EXPERT PIANO TUNING $5.00 by George Anderson, Expert Tuner We are Alaskan agents for Kohler and Brumbach Pianos. We sell and rent pianos and have the only expert resident professional piano tuner. We also pay taxes in Juneau and Alaska For expert piano service call or telephone Anderson Music Shoppe LT T T LT SHEAFFER PENS, PENCILS ». and DESK SETS They carry a lifetime guarantee SKRIP—“The Successor to Ink” Wright Shoppe PAUL BLOEDHORN, Proprietor ARNOLD’S BOOTERY ALASKA MEAT CO. QUALITY AND SERVICE TO YOUR LIKING Meadowbrook Butter Austin Fresh Tamales PHONE 39 Deliveries—10:30, 2:30, 4:30